Off-the-shelf offensive security tools and poorly configured cloud environments create openings in the attack surface. Elastic (NYSE: ESTC), the Search AI Company, today released its 2024 Elastic Global Threat Report, produced by Elastic Security Labs. Based on observations from over 1 billion data points, the report reveals adversary success from using offensive security tools (OSTs) — testing tools created to proactively identify security flaws — alongside misconfigured cloud environments and a growing emphasis on credential access.
“As a global platform used by more than 200 million people, we’re committed to building the world’s most trusted visual communication platform for our community across the globe. The Elastic Global Threat Report is a great asset that ensures our threat detection stays laser-focused on real-world adversary activity,” said Raymond Schippers, Canva’s Director of Security Engineering for Detection and Response. “Understanding the top adversary techniques in the cloud is critical, and unlike other vendor reports that simply drop a name, Elastic’s diamond models give us a fast, in-depth look at adversary movements, helping us stay ahead of the game.
Key findings in the report include:
Adversaries are utilising off-the-shelf tools
Offensive security tools (OSTs), including Cobalt Strike and Metasploit, made up ~54% of observed malware alerts
Cobalt Strike accounted for 27% of malware attacks
Enterprises are misconfiguring cloud environments, allowing adversaries to thrive
Nearly 47% of Microsoft Azure failures were tied to storage account misconfigurations
Nearly 44% of Google Cloud users failed checks coming from BigQuery — specifically, a lack of customer-managed encryption
S3 checks accounted for 30% of Amazon Web Services (AWS) failures — specifically a lack of multifactor authentication (MFA) being implemented by security teams
In the wake of successful counters for Defense Evasion, attackers are leaning into legitimate credentials to infiltrate
Credential Access accounted for ~23% of all cloud behaviors, primarily in Microsoft Azure environments
There was a 12% increase in Brute Force techniques — making up nearly 35% of all techniques in Microsoft Azure
While endpoint behaviors accounted for ~3% of the total behaviors in Linux, 89% of them involved brute-force attacks
There has been a 6% decrease in Defense Evasion behaviors over the last year
“The discoveries in the 2024 Elastic Global Threat Report reinforce the behavior we continue to witness: defender technologies are working. Our research shows a 6% decrease in Defense Evasion from last year,” said Jake King, head of threat and security intelligence at Elastic. “Adversaries are more focused on abusing security tools and investing in legitimate credential gathering to act on their objectives, which reinforces the need for organisations to have well-tuned security capabilities and policies.“
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